Modern textual critics have adopted the Coherence-Based Genealogical Method as opposed to the traditional Local Text-Types Theory (reflected in the updated NA28 standard text). Along with this shift in approach to textual criticism comes a belief that it is impossible to reproduce an an "autograph" of any New Testament writing - only an "initial text" (Ausgangstext) can be constructed which is only the hypothetical reconstruction of a text that stands at the beginning of a textual tradition. How does this affect the traditional Protestant Christian beliefs in scriptural inerrancy and infallibility, particularly for those traditions that continue to use the Nestle-Aland (and future UBS) texts for scholarly study of the Greek New Testament?

We have always accepted flaws in modern versions, and even the idea that our oldest known manuscripts are not likely perfect reproductions of the original manuscripts. However, since we can reasonably reconstruct enough to understand the meaning, minor flaws in modern versions are inconsequential.

It's only the straw-man version of infallibility - the one that claims we think modern translations (or even old copies of the original manuscripts like the Textus Receptus) are inerrant - that is knocked down by this method of textual criticism.

Thanks for clarifying that. I guess I never fully understood those doctrines concerning scripture, although this seems like a cop-out way of backward reasoning (the initial formulators of these doctrines probably did believe that various manuscripts and translations were inspired, but more intelligent Christians came along and redefined the terms to account for modern scholarly findings). But even still, this answer reflects current understandings, so I accepted it.
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DanJan 4 '13 at 0:40

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I'm not so sure it's an entirely new thing. I can't defend this statement with fact or reference off the top of my head, but when you consider that some of the errors are as minor as a misspelled word, logically it seems that even the early Church would have held that a misspelled word is not "inerrant" but doesn't affect the doctrinal message. (Wow, if that wasn't a run-on sentence. Even for me it was a mouthful. ;-) But this was an interesting question!
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David♦Jan 4 '13 at 0:43

Yeah, I'd have to look into the historical development of the doctrines of scripture to see if my hunch is even based on factual data (which I am gradually doing as I work my way through Pelikan's five-volume set on the historical development of doctrine). My tradition does not even have a definitive text (nor any official canon) of the bible, so the question is irrelevant/misguided from our perspective. I was just curious to hear a Protestant perspective on this. Thanks for sharing!
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DanJan 4 '13 at 0:51

So when Paul writes a scriptures he never uses erasers?
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Jim ThioSep 9 '13 at 3:33

@JimThio he didn't write with lead on the same kind of paper we use today, and erasers didn't exist. Anachronism....
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DanAug 29 '14 at 14:58